A Practical Guide to UNIX® for Mac OS® X Users by Mark G. Sobell

Underneath Mac OSR X's attractive graphical person interface (GUI) is the main robust working method ever created: UNIXR. With unequalled readability and perception, this e-book explains UNIX for the Mac OS X usergiving you overall keep watch over over your method, so that you can get extra performed, speedier. development on Mark Sobell's hugely praised a pragmatic consultant to the UNIX process, it gives you finished suggestions at the UNIX command line instruments each consumer, administrator, and developer must mastertogether with the world's top daily UNIX reference.This publication is choked with hundreds of thousands of high quality examples. From networking and procedure utilities to shells and programming, this can be UNIX from the floor upboth the "whys" and the "hows"for each Mac person. you are going to comprehend the relationships among GUI instruments and their command line opposite numbers. want rapid solutions? do not trouble with complicated on-line "manual pages": depend on this book's example-rich, quick-access, 236-page command reference!"

Preview
In the area of Unix working structures, a few of the BSDs include a protracted historical past of top quality software program and well-designed options, making them a favourite OS of a variety of clients. between budget-minded clients who followed BSD early directly to builders of a few of today's greatest websites, the recognition of BSD structures maintains to develop. in case you use the BSD working procedure, then you definately recognize that the key of its good fortune isn't just in its price ticket: functional, trustworthy, terribly solid and versatile, BSD additionally bargains lots of fertile floor for artistic, time-saving tweaks and tips, and sure, even the opportunity to have a few enjoyable.
"Fun? " you ask. probably "fun" wasn't lined within the guide that taught you to put in BSD and administer it successfully. yet BSD Hacks, the newest in O'Reilly's well known Hacks sequence, bargains a distinct set of functional suggestions, methods, tools--and even fun--for directors and gear clients of BSD structures.
BSD Hacks takes an inventive method of saving time and getting extra performed, with fewer assets. You'll benefit from the instruments and ideas that make the world's most sensible Unix clients extra efficient. instead of spending hours with a dry technical record studying what switches decide on a command, you'll research concrete, functional makes use of for that command.
The publication starts with hacks to customise the consumer atmosphere. You'll the right way to be extra effective within the command line, timesaving information for atmosphere user-defaults, tips to automate lengthy instructions, and keep lengthy periods for later evaluate. different hacks within the ebook are grouped within the following components:
Customizing the person surroundings
Dealing with records and Filesystems
The Boot and Login Environments
Backing Up
Networking Hacks
Securing the procedure
Going past the fundamentals
Keeping updated
Grokking BSD
If you will want greater than your general BSD user--you are looking to discover and scan, unearth shortcuts, create helpful instruments, and are available up with enjoyable issues to aim in your own--BSD Hacks is a must have. This booklet will flip usual clients into energy clients and method directors into large procedure administrators.
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Alt. ISBN:9780596006792

Written through Martin Brown, Perl specialist and writer of the hugely praised first variation, this entire reference is perfect for builders of each point, and is up-to-date to incorporate insurance of Perl five. 6.

This is often an outstanding publication! It explains many stuff i have spotted yet did not understand good in FreeBSD and Linux. The authors are very proficient at speaking, a unprecedented reward referring to tech e-book and on-line document authors (generally, such works so boring, they could in basic terms serve (too usually) as ambiguous reference material).

Unique version utilizing Linux management is the whole, complete reference booklet for the skilled administrator who must discover ways to run a Linux approach and effectively deal with it. This publication has a superb attract these directors whose wisdom is proscribed to home windows or NetWare networks as they combine Linux into their infrastructure.

Additional resources for A Practical Guide to UNIX® for Mac OS® X Users

Example text

When you are working on a GUI, you bypass the shell and execute a program by clicking an icon or name. Refer to Chapter 5 (page 113) for more information on the shell. Correcting Mistakes This section explains how to correct typos and other errors you may make while you are logged in on a character-based display. Because the shell and most other utilities do not interpret the command line or other text until after you press RETURN, you can correct typing mistakes before you press RETURN. You can correct typing mistakes in several ways: erase one character at a time, back up a word at a time, or back up to the beginning of the command line in one step.

The text console, described on page 35, displays a purely textual environment on the system monitor. Graphical Login When the system boots, the default behavior is to log in automatically the first user account that was created when the system was set up. No password is required. Once you log out, the system presents a list of accounts that you can log in to (Figure 2-1). When you select one of these accounts, the system prompts for a password and, when you supply the correct password and press RETURN, logs you in.

What would you do if you could not log in? Advanced Exercises 5. How many man pages are in the Devices subsection of the system manual? ) 6. The example on page 29 shows that man pages for write appear in sections 1 and 2 of the system Part I: The Mac OS X Operating System 51 52 Part I: The Mac OS X Operating System manual. Explain how you can use man to determine which sections of the system manual contain a manual page with a given name. 7. How would you find out which OS X utilities create and work with archive files?